| Literature DB >> 23972367 |
Abstract
William Harvey's writings betray amazing insights born out of countless hours of thoughtful experimentation. Throughout his life, Harvey worked as a tireless and thoughtful researcher and a transmitter and intermediary between the ancient Greek natural philosophers and physicians and the "moderns," for whom he founded two forward-looking, interlinked sciences: modern physiology and nascent cardiology. Harvey's methodology and demonstrations were of such fundamental and standardizing nature as to secure the sure progress of these two sciences. Thus, he rendered to them such a service as Descartes's cogito ergo sum furnished to Philosophy in giving it a rational standard of certainty, for want of which the more speculative minds of that era were inundated with extraordinary conjectures. If Harvey disproved Galen, he absorbed and continued in his physiologic research many a principle from Aristotle, whose supreme disciple he remains. The guidance and authority of Aristotle were strong with him to the end. Harvey's account of the motions of the heart and blood in the circulation demonstrated that complex physiological systems can be represented in straightforward mechanical terms, a concept which has remained fundamental to the present day. The philosophical implication of William Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood was the resolute application of the experimental method to cardiology. In my judgment, he established today's forward-looking discipline of translational cardiovascular research. In due course, he should be widely acknowledged to have done so.Entities:
Keywords: Greek natural philosophy and Harveian structure–function correlations; Harvey’s Socratis regula or Socrates’ rule for interrogation across numerous animal species; Harvey’s extension of Aristotle and transformation of Galen; Harvey’s study of arterial pulsatile flow; Historical continuity in the methodology of modern medical science; Systolic contraction as the motus proprius or characteristic action of the heart
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23972367 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.07.253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiol ISSN: 0167-5273 Impact factor: 4.164